A Chinese pastor’s advice to the American church
Bob Fu is sometimes affectionately called the pastor of China’s underground railroad.

Bob Fu is sometimes affectionately called the pastor of China’s underground railroad.
The reasons behind the professor’s highly selective criticism are laid bare when she admits what she thinks to be the real bogeyman of many homeschool families: “a majority of are driven by conservative Christian beliefs, and seek to remove their children from mainstream culture.”
Information comes at us in waves, with conjecture in the place of facts and assertions in the place of arguments.
Being unable to gather with God’s people to worship, to read and hear the Word together, and to partake of the sacraments is a real and profound loss.
It’s a false dilemma to assume that if someone is worried about jobs and the economy, they don’t care about people’s lives; or if we’re worried about the threat the virus poses to people’s lives, they’re obviously callous toward anyone in financial straits.
History tells of several devastating pandemics that swept Europe in the early days of Christianity and, during all of them, Christ-followers distinguished themselves by their counter-cultural responses.
Ideology, not evidence, is the primary force driving the push to “affirm” gender confusion and ban any other type of therapy. Another force is emotional manipulation.
The purpose of healthcare is to heal and preserve life, not to end life.
Commerical surrogacy is banned in most countries because of the potential for human exploitation. Among those pushing hardest for commercial surrogacy in New York are gay couples.
To lead with “The Nuclear Family Was a Mistake” muddies the waters. Even muddier is Brooks’ suggestion that alternative forms of kinship, which he calls “chosen families,” are legitimate replacements for the nuclear family.